You should not use a list comprehension at all here. List comprehensions are great at building a list of values, and should not be used for general looping. Using a list comprehension for the side-effects is a waste of memory on a perfectly good list object.
List comprehensions are also expressions, so can only contain other expressions. del
is a statement and can't be used inside an expression.
Just use a for
loop:
# use a tuple if you need a literal sequence; stored as a constant
# with the code object for fast loading
for key in ('selected', 'actual', 'previous', 'forecast'):
del event[key]
or rebuild the dictionary with a dictionary comprehension:
# Use a set for fast membership testing, also stored as a constant
event = {k: v for k, v in event.items()
if k not in {'selected', 'actual', 'previous', 'forecast'}}
The latter creates an entirely new dictionary, so other existing references to the same object won't see any changes.
If you must use key deletion in an expression, you can use object.__delitem__(key)
, but this is not the place; you'd end up with a list with None
objects as a result, a list you discard immediately.
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